Crunching my primers

Perhaps double check that your shell plate hasn’t worked loose after all those rounds. The main screw seems to need to be tightened ever once and a while. My 650 was giving this same issue and snugging up the plate sorted it out
 
Interesting stuff posted'ear.
I tried the primer feed on my Rockcrusher and dint like the feel of pressing the primers in.
Or lack there of.
Went back to the simplicity of the Lee hand held.
The tumb has some good feeling agents still left in it after awl these years awf abewz'in it.
Still my go to way awf install'in primers in their pawkitts.

Something don't feel right, it's pretty noticeable awm me tumb.
 
Interesting stuff posted'ear.
I tried the primer feed on my Rockcrusher and dint like the feel of pressing the primers in.
Or lack there of.
Went back to the simplicity of the Lee hand held.
The tumb has some good feeling agents still left in it after awl these years awf abewz'in it.
Still my go to way awf install'in primers in their pawkitts.

Something don't feel right, it's pretty noticeable awm me tumb.

The old metal Lee hand priming tool with the thread in shell holders was great, by turning the shell holder in or out provided the ideal seating depth. However, I was less enamored with the plastic models which frequently left high primers, no matter how hard you squeezed the handle. I finally gave up and went to an RCBS bench mounted priming tool, which has a surprisingly sensitive feel. If I was going to purchase a hand priming tool today, it would be the one Sinclair International sells under their own name.
 
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Perhaps double check that your shell plate hasn’t worked loose after all those rounds. The main screw seems to need to be tightened ever once and a while. My 650 was giving this same issue and snugging up the plate sorted it out

I am going to do this. I checked other rounds I recently loaded and 15% are identical Win cases. Those gave me no problems so maybe there's something going on with the press that combined with the Win's caused the primers to not seat properly. I've sorted the Wins out of the next couple of hundred and I'll see if I have problems with the non-wins.
 
Also .....sometimes a spent primer isnt completely removed from the primer pocket (if it has been crimped or glued sometimes just the center pops out leaving a ring behind in the primer pocket.......about 1% of my issues is this and in ALL brass I have reloaded (9,40,45,38,357,223,44,)

Hope this helps......
I find this most often in Hornady brass... to a point where it's easier to disacard than worry about it as I have lots of brass.
 
I de-primed some of the Win brass I had sorted out and they either have the smooth edges like two of the following or they are like the other. (Two photos of the same 4)

PKV640W.jpg

tYy6J5S.jpg


(woops .. forgot to resize the photos)
 
Top left and bottom right are ring crimped. Anything looking like this needs extra prep like swaging or it can be culled and recycled.

Top right and bottom left look normal although something, probably a slightly off center primer, has cut a slight groove at the 2:00 position on the bottom left one. Don't matter, these two should reload just fine assuming there is nothing else wrong with them that isn't visible.
 
I de-primed some of the Win brass I had sorted out and they either have the smooth edges like two of the following or they are like the other.

Just look at the pictures I posted earlier (LINK). They should be easy to spot going forward. It's 9mm so I wouldn't bother with crimped cases, there's more where that came from, lol, a lot more.
 
Just look at the pictures I posted earlier (LINK). They should be easy to spot going forward. It's 9mm so I wouldn't bother with crimped cases, there's more where that came from, lol, a lot more.

Those pictures you shared were very helpful and much appreciated! I definitely looked at them more than once. I need to study crimped and uncrimped cases with primers still in to be better able to tell them apart. I've been de-priming at Stage 1 then priming the cartridge at Stage 2 without interrupting between stage 1 and stage 2.
 
Those pictures you shared were very helpful and much appreciated! I definitely looked at them more than once. I need to study crimped and uncrimped cases with primers still in to be better able to tell them apart. I've been de-priming at Stage 1 then priming the cartridge at Stage 2 without interrupting between stage 1 and stage 2.

You'll get better at spotting that small ring while sorting your brass prior to loading.
 
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